How much garden per person




















Yield 10 to 25 pounds per foot row. Space plants 24 to 30 inches apart. Grow 30 plants per person. Yield 7 to 10 pounds per foot row. Grow 5 plants per person. Yield 6 to 8 stalks per plant. Space plants 6 inches apart in rows 2 feet apart. Grow 1 vine for 1 to 4 people. Set vining plants 10 feet apart and train to a sturdy trellis or wire support. Space plants 6 to 12 inches apart in rows 2 to 3 feet apart. Chinese Cabbage. Grow 6 to 8 heads per person. Space plants 4 inches apart in rows 24 to 30 inches apart.

Grow 2 to 3 plants per person. Yield 4 to 8 pounds per foot row. Space plants 15 to 18 inches apart in rows 3 feet apart. Grow 12 to 20 plants per person. Yield 1 to 2 ears per plants, 10 to 12 ears per foot row. Space plant 4 to 6 inches apart in rows2 to 3 feet apart. Grow 6 plants per person. Grow 3 to 4 plants per quart for pickling. Space plants 1 to 3 feet apart in rows 3 to 6 feet apart. Yield 8 fruits per Italian oval varieties; yield 10 to 15 fruits per Asian varieties. Space plants 24 to 30 inches apart in rows 3 feet apart.

Endive and Escarole. Yield 3 to 6 pounds per foot row. Grow 12 to 16 plants per person. Yield 10 to 30 bulbs per foot row. Space cloves 3 to 6 inches apart in rows 15 inches apart.

Yield 1 to 6 pound tuber per plant. Space plants 8 to 12 inches apart. Grow 4 to 5 plants per person. Space plants 12 inches apart in rows 12 inches apart. Space plants 4 to 6 inches apart in rows 30 inches apart. Grow 12 to 15 plants per person. Space plants 2 to 4 inches apart in rows 6 to 10 inches apart. Grow 6 to 10 plants per person; plant succession crops with each harvest. Yield 4 to 10 pounds per foot row. Space looseleaf lettuce 4 inches apart and all other types 12 inches apart in rows 16 to 24 inches apart.

Grow 2 to plants per person. Yield 2 to 3 melons per vine. Space plants 3 to 4 feet apart in rows 3 feet wide. Grow 6 to 10 plants per person. Space plant 6 to 12 inches apart in rows 15 to 30 inches apart. Yield 5 to 10 pounds per foot row. Onion, Bulb. Yield 7 to 10 pounds of bulbs per foot row. Space onion sets or transplants 4 to 5 inches apart in rows 18 inches apart. Grow 10 plants per person.

Yield 10 pounds per foot row. Space plants 3 to 4 inches apart in rows 24 inches apart. Yield 2 to 6 pounds per foot row. Space plants 2 to 4 inches apart in rows2 feet apart for bush peas, 5 feet apart for vining peas. For a while, I struggled with knowing exactly how much to plant in a vegetable garden to feed my family. Finding that balance between having enough food to eat and preserve, while wasting as little as possible to overripeness, frost, and the compost pile, can be tricky.

What size garden does it take to feed a family of four? This is the most limiting factor when deciding how many plants to grow per person. Even if you want to grow enough tomatoes to feed your family for an entire season, those plants take up a lot of space.

A tip from my own experience: I tend to focus on growing vegetables that are expensive to buy organic, like tomatoes and bell peppers, over less expensive produce like potatoes and onions. You may be able to get away with growing salad greens in a window box, letting beans and cucumbers climb a back fence, or adding artichoke plants to your ornamental landscaping in the front yard.

By being creative with plant placements and repurposing household items like a vintage clawfoot bathtub! It goes without saying that you should grow the fruits and vegetables that your family likes to eat, and plant only one or two of each variety that you want to try. Be honest and realistic about what your typical meals look like, and how much time you actually have to use or cook what you grow. Yep, been there. If rhubarb is something you only use for the occasional pie or cobbler, you might be better off just buying it.

If green smoothies are a regular part of your morning routine, you might want to grow more spinach and carrots than suggested. And if you absolutely love beets, you could succession plant 5 to 10 plants per person every couple of weeks, instead of a single crop all at once.

A toddler will obviously eat less than a teenager, and family members who stay home all day will likely eat more than those who commute to work and eat out often. I will definitely use this again. I bought a set of wheels to be attached so that I could roll it out of the garage in the morning, and back in at night. I bought a new canner last year and I have a lot of recipes to try.

Everyone needs to try it just to hear that ping when they seal! What would you recommend for plant based eating? My husband and I are both vegan, no animal products whatsoever. How many times would you multiple the plants per person rule for a plant based diet to you think?

But no food chart.?!? Did I waste my time or over look the chart some how. It should have had a big blue download me button in the email with it. This year we used cattle panels for our pole beans,tomatoes and cucumbers. It was the ticket we will never go back.

It was so easy picking the vegetables. Do you have a book with all this information in it? How to plant for a years worth of food I live in Australia so I will of course have to adapt the times of the plantings to correspond with the Southern Hemisphere seasons but to have a guide would be great.

If you could include the tips for root storage chart in with the book that would be great. Please email me what it would cost book chart and shipping and what payment options you take that would be great.

Thank you Nancy Melchior. Thanks for the great information. Was raised with a huge family garden and your tips and instructions are perfect. I have always gown way too much for my family but now its only my husband and I and I still grow the same amount but I bring it to the food pantrys for people who do not have money for food. And I always have lots even after that. A idea for others who have extra maybe.

I enjoyed listening to you and learning how many plants per person. This is very helpful to me. I do have a book on canning so I can use it.

Thanks so much for having this on Pinterest! Thank you SO much for this guideline. Hi Dot, so happy to help! I love the information your site provides and have re-pinned quite a bit of information especially gardening items, storing, and things of that nature..

Thank you Melissa for sharing your farming information and teaching the class. I have only been gardening as a retired person for 4 summers, and each year is a learning year. We live in Nelchina Alaska and I try to grow for 2 and then some for family and friends. Learning what grows here was the 1st and foremost.

Question on the garlic. Thank you looking forward to Wednesday class. Hello Melissa I was just wondering how do you keep the deer and critters out of your garden? I see in the pictures you have no fence around your garden.

I look forward to learning from you. Melissa I picked up a copy of your book at Barnes and Nobel when I was there. Am I suppose to let you know I have a copy. Thank You so much!! This is an excellent guide that is easy to understand. It really helped me. Thank You again for your kind guidance. I found this amazing website to help me plan out my garden and it also has a free planner for how much to grow per person.

I know you also have a tool but i wanted to share one that is online for those that want the tech to think it out for them like me. This is very insightful! I could definitely increase it and I think I will next year. Thanks much! Wow, I relate So much to Melissa!

I honestly thought that was the dream until, I saw the way Betta fish were treated in Petco and wanted to report this, then I came across PETA animal rights group they showed me how animals were really treated and that they experience all of the same emotions we do.

For me learning that veganism excist is just beautiful. We are all easily misled, I myself was about to be just like you Melissa, I love your content, but when realised animals where not a isle of toys in stock for me to use I quickly changed to a plant based lifestyle aka: vegan and try to teach others!

What type of pole beans do you grow? We have been using the Lazy Housewife beans and they are great during season, but they do not freeze or can well. A lot of people also like a Blue Lake pole green bean. I will check it out. To grow all the food for one person's needs for the whole year requires, for most people, at least 4, square feet—though some diet designs are possible that can use a smaller area. Four thousand sq. Knowing how much of each vegetable to plant is a bit trickier.

Even then, tastes change. Some plants simply take up more space. Artichokes , asparagus, and rhubarb are perennial plants that need to sit in the garden all season. Vining crops, like squash , cucumbers , and melons will need room to spread out or up. On the other hand, many crops can be planted in succession, planting only a few feet of a row every 2 to 3 weeks so that a new crop is continually coming in. Succession planting is very dependent on the length of your growing season.

Warm climates can do several plantings of corn, while cooler climates can squeeze in a second planting of peas.



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